Compelling pictures? You try to track an object moving at the equivalent of Mach 25 and take a picture of it. And through atmospheric murk, to boot. The orbit is known. It should be available in any amateur astronomy magazine. Viewing is probably best near sunrise or dusk, when the sky background is black but there is sunlight to illuminate the station. Midday is no good (sky is too bright). Night is no good (in Earth's shadow). You can probably see it with the naked eye, but shooting a photo on the fly is a lot harder.
Compelling pictures? You try to track an object moving at the equivalent of Mach 25 and take a picture of it. And through atmospheric murk, to boot. The orbit is known. It should be available in any amateur astronomy magazine. Viewing is probably best near sunrise or dusk, when the sky background is black but there is sunlight to illuminate the station. Midday is no good (sky is too bright). Night is no good (in Earth's shadow). You can probably see it with the naked eye, but shooting a photo on the fly is a lot harder.